567 resultados para 2 cruises


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Coastal upwelling regions have been identified as sites of enhanced CH4 emissions to the atmosphere. The coastal upwelling area off Mauritania (NW Africa) is one of the most biologically productive regions of the world's ocean but its CH4 emissions have not been quantified so far. More than 1000 measurements of atmospheric and dissolved CH4 in the surface layer in the upwelling area off Mauritania were performed as part of the German SOPRAN (Surface Ocean Processes in the Anthropocene) study during two cruises in March/April 2005 (P320/1) and February 2007 (P348). During P348 enhanced CH4 saturations of up to 200% were found close to the coast and were associated with upwelling of South Atlantic Central Water. An area-weighted, seasonally adjusted estimate yielded overall annual CH4 emissions in the range from 1.6 to 2.9 Gg CH4. Thus the upwelling area off Mauritania represents a regional hot spot of CH4 emissions but seems to be of minor importance for the global oceanic CH4 emissions.

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The detection of multi-decadal trends in the oceanic oxygen content and its possible attribution to global warming is protracted by the presence of a substantial amount of interannual to decadal variability, which hitherto is poorly known and characterized. Here we address this gap by studying interannual to decadal changes of the oxygen concentration in the Subpolar Mode Water (SPMW), the Intermediate Water (IW) and the Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW) in the eastern North Atlantic. We use data from a hydrographic section located in the eastern North Atlantic at about 48°N repeated 12 times over a period of 19 years from 1993 through 2011, with a nearly annual resolution up to 2005. Despite a substantial amount of year-to-year variability, we observe a long-term decrease in the oxygen concentration of all three water masses, with the largest changes occurring from 1993 to 2002. During that time period, the trends were mainly caused by a contraction of the subpolar gyre associated with a northwestward shift of the Subpolar Front (SPF) in the eastern North Atlantic. This caused SPMW to be ventilated at lighter densities and its original density range being invaded by subtropical waters with substantially lower oxygen concentrations. The contraction of the subpolar gyre reduced also the penetration of IW of subpolar origin into the region in favor of an increased northward transport of IW of subtropical origin, which is also lower in oxygen. The long-term oxygen changes in the MOW were mainly affected by the interplay between circulation and solubility changes. Besides the long-term signals, mesoscale variability leaves a substantial imprint as well, affecting the water column over at least the upper 1000 m and laterally by more than 400 km. Mesoscale eddies induced changes in the oxygen concentration of a magnitude that can substantially alias analyses of long-term changes based on repeat hydrographic data that are being collected at intervals of typically 10 years.

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We use digital seismic reflection profiles within a 1° * 1° survey area on the Cocos Ridge (COCOS6N) to study the extent and timing of sedimentation and sediment redistribution on the Cocos Ridge. The survey was performed to understand how sediment focusing might affect paleoceanographic flux measurements in a region known for significant downslope transport. COCOS6N contains ODP Site 1241 to ground truth the seismic stratigraphy, and there is a seamount ridge along the base of the ridge that forms a basin (North Flank Basin) to trap sediments transported downslope. Using the Site 1241 seismic stratigraphy and densities extrapolated from wireline logging, we document mass accumulation rates (MARs) since 11.2 Ma. The average sediment thickness at COCOS6N is 196 m, ranging from outcropping basalt at the ridge crest to ~ 400 m at North Flank Basin depocenters. Despite significant sediment transport, the average sedimentation over the entire area is well correlated to sediment fluxes at Site 1241. A low mass accumulation rate (MAR) interval is associated with the 'Miocene carbonate crash' interval even though COCOS6N was at the equator at that time and relatively shallow. Highest MAR occurs within the late Miocene-early Pliocene biogenic bloom interval. Lowest average MAR is in the Pleistocene, as plate tectonic motions caused COCOS6N to leave the equatorial productivity zone. The Pliocene and Pleistocene also exhibit higher loss of sediment from the ridge crest and transport to North Flank Basin. Higher tidal energy on the ridge caused by tectonic movement toward the margin increased sediment focusing in the younger section.